The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, February 27, 1913, Image 3

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t CITY IN AWFUL FIX _ .* m ? i i i 1 FEARFUL STENCH THE l?N1 KAD BUSES ? BATTLE BAGES FKUT It Was Opened by the Rebels in An w fwer to MederoV Demand for #ur? I; render ?Uhe City, WMch U ii Darkness at Night, is in a Deplor able Condition. Battle ragad again In 'Mexico Cit] on Friday. That morning President Madero sent .another ultimatum tc Felix Diaz, (demanding his surren <ler and the iiqply came in the shape of a number of cannon .balls from the insurgents' biggest guns. The ire salvo from the rebel lines was a 6:46 o'clock itihat morning followed quickly by a series of others li rapid succession. Then the machine guns and rifles ibegan their whir anc patter, the fine being coneentratee where government troops were gath eriing. The federal guns did not de lay in making vigorous reply. The city was dn almost total dark ness through the night, owing to the cutting of the electric cables by fly Ing shells. Friday provisions of al kinds were more scarce than evei and prices soared to unlieavd o heights. Robberies, burglaries anc petty crimes of all kinds are on the increase, owing to the lack of police protection and illumination. The disposition of garbage has be> come a serious problem and the changing breezes bring home to the people that of the carcasses of hunstreet fighting still lie in the gutters Foreigners of military experiencef who have carefully followed the operations in connection with the Dias revolt declared Friday that in theii opinion, Diaz would be able to hold out Indefinitely against the federal attack. "The government has an almost Impossible task In subjugating direct assault," declared one military expert connected with the British legation. The rebels have ammunition enough to continue the warfare for several days at least. They alsc have many more machine guns than they have yet brought Into use Their losses hitherto have been comparatively light. Their food supn 11 no n rfl a 11 ffl r?n t [JllOO U1 V u u*uv/?v?? VI The men are receiving regularly two dollars a day and a large amount appears to be available. The marksfftanshlp of the rebel artillery during W11 the fighting has been excellent and their positions with ma-etaoin and their ability to sweep all approaches to their positions with machine guns makeB it appear inevitable that any attempt by the Madero forces to rush the arsenal would result In heavy slaughter. An attempt of this sort was made In the last hour of Thursday night's battle, when a detachment of federals marched down the streets toward the arsenal, occupied by the rebels, and was repulsed with heavy loss^ '1 It is believed this experience will cause General Huerta to abandon such tactics and confine future operations to the bombardment of the rebl positions with the consequent destruction of neutral property and the killing of more non-combatants. The death of another woman during Thursday's fighting further excited the foreign residents. Mrs. Greenfield, mother of Harry Greenfield, an employee of a power company, was killed by a shell in Victoria street. This makes the third woman killed among the foreign residents. Mrs. Greenfield was a Canadian. Conditions generally in the capital ' a are steadily growing worse. All busi v?r?fh nnd nrivate except I ** l\llvoa, i/?nm .. that connected with the war, has ceased. Even the general post office has closed Its doors and many of its employees are carrying rifles in the j, ranks of the federal army. Five days of fighting in the streets of the Mexican capital, has, in the opinion of close observers done more / to change the sentiment of Mextt cans in regard to intervention than f , has the entire two-year period of f revolution. ; Months ago a quiet feeling began to develop among a few of the better class of Mexicans in favor of outside assistance, but it found no public expression at that time. The sentiment has steadily grown, however, f and the events of the past few days have strengthened It tremendously. / The subject Is now frankly discussed by Mexicans and foreigners, and frequ^Btly it is a Mexican citizen who expresses the opinion publicly, that { the United States or some other powf er, or powers, Jointly should intervene. i The fighting in the streets Saturday was as savage as on any other day of the week's battle. The Amer(j Jean embassy again came directly i! within the line of fire and the Ameri can ambassador, Henry i.ane wnson, had a narrow escape from a rifle bhllet which whistled close to his head. .' Shortly before Ave o'clock the German legation was struck by a shell. There were numerous casualties I among non-combatants. A strange ' fatality seemed to hare fol ALL KEWS IS SHUT OFF i m . . - jCITY or MEXICO (CUT tBFF FItOM BEST OF WOULD. Mexlcu Oorernment Talas Charge of i Telegraph, and Slops XII Messages Bearing on Situation. ( i The strongest -censorship on all dispatches has tbeen established at Mexico (City. Government officials ' took charge of the cable (office shortt ly after tflve o'clock Saturday evening and ruthlessly discarded messages of br\ holp r 1 a nf-rn. CUJ 1 tWI'WUlUDli ?.o uv vuw>> Code imessagee and ail messages containing any expressions whatever i chat might be construed into a sugl gestion of the important happenings , In the Capital came under the ban . end were promptly confiscated by the 3 censor aod his aawistants. 3 Nevertheless several dispatches of t a somewhat detached nature escapl ed the vigilance <of censonship and I an early bulletin was flashed .through ,, that the sarmiatioe, signed at two , o'clock Svmday mwning, hod been I broken and that tooth sides wer? j fighting savagely. The Mexican government was un. able, however, to shrst off thetoffi-ial dispatches of the diplomatic representatives, but as th-ey are sent in 3 cipher considerable delay is toeing experienced because <?f the time? ocj txpied in translation and tlie fear is expressed that ma?y tilings may f o^'ur in the Mexican Caoral <ie*riI m^nta- *o the foreign residents toe? 3 fotvj the excct situation ts learned toy " the home governments. iRrief dispatches giving a general idea, of the situation prior to the 3 fresh outbreak of hostilities were received by the censors and allowed to pass along to their respective destinations, but the government apparently is determined that not a word of the fighting, which has torn the city asunder for eight days, shall be communicated to the outside I world if that can be prevented. . The Government has not only shut the world off from Mexico City, but so far as the public is concerned, has ) shut Mexico City off from the world, including the whole of the Mexican Republic. News dispatches sent on Saturday night from the United ' -1? *" Pif u u;nro nithor 5LilLt5? IU WCAiV/U vjiij >. vi v, refused or held up, the Intention evidently being that the residents 1 in the Capital shall not bo informed of tlw measures which have been undertaken by the American and other Governments to protect their interests. ? ? ? INJURED BY DANIMITE. Dentist is Injured Wliile Filing a 1 Dynamite Cap^ BOjjJBnb ouojs Xq-JBau uo XuBdraof) pbojijbh ?>IU?a -lAsuuej oin Xq paXopIwa gjom suin -oia aqj, iqSju Xupuoiv 'XJJ3(3 )B SUJBSOJO B )B UIBJ) )q3jajj u o)uj i ubj u|BJ} puns b uoqAV pajnfuj aaq -lunu b puB pawq 0JOAV uora xjg qooJAV "I IK>II!M IWJ.Tuo,,' uaqraeidas )sbi i ao^ajoiji uiojj ranjpuBT o) jueM ?H noHBjado ub joj eniAoqey o; ueqB) sum. BPUM 'J<3 'opioq ioqoo{B ub joj jaddojs b sb pasn eq pinoo )j juqj os UAiop am oj pajjujs *3nid. BSBjq b )nq 8ujq)ou eq oj )j 3ujqujq) puB 'jossaoapaad sjq Xq jjaj uaaq pBq )j ojoqM aoqjo ejq ui dBO eq) punoj epuAl *J(I *paABS eq ubo )i JI inj)qnop Bj )uq) paSBiuup Xipuq os "eXa euo puB jjo UMOiq sbm qranq) )q3jj 8JH 'papoidxa 'japujuqo 8)1 jo juujouSj '3unu sum. aq qojqM dbo ajiuiBuXp b uoi[m )q3ju Xup -sjnqj, pajnfui Xnnjujud bum 'innjp -u-BT JO jHHuoy u n a -u loed R. M. Meredith, of Troy, Ohio. He was slightly wounded two days ago while passing the streets. Saturday a shell crash- i ed into Porter's Hotel and killed him. The wife of R. M. iMeredith was Miss < Jett, of Cynthina, Ky. The couple were on their honeymoon. Sidney ( Sutherland, correspondent of a Salt Lake City newspaper, but a resident of Mexico City, was wounded by the same shell. Official advices received from Ambassador Wilson tell of the narrow escape of the British minister, Fran- 1 cis W. Strango, from Federal bullets while on his way to a conference at ] the American embassy on Saturday. The automobile in which Mr. Strange ] was riding escorted by a Federal guard, was struck in several places. < This gives some slight indication of the dangers encountered by the diplo- ] matic representatives in their endeavors to bring about a peace settlement. Further advices from the ambassdor say that the majority of the Ameri- , can residents have found places of f relative safety, although a few of ( them have refused to abandon their y homes. \ | Hostilities between the Mexican 1 Federals and rebels were resumed c with great fierceness In the Mexican < capital Sunday after a truce which a lasted only a few hours. The armls- 1 tlce, signed at two o'clock Sunday : morning by the representatives of both sides agreeing to suspend operation for twenty-four hours, was \ broken before noon. Soon the sound < of hefery cannonading and the whirr f of machine guns announced the re- t turn of the Federal troops to their i posts in front of the arsenal. I Ki 4 \ -" ( ( TRUE HTHEI UVE || M A WOMAN WW OrPMES FEMALE ? c MIVRAOE. W Veli?ven Woman Was Created (or 1 Two PurpouM Alone in thi* World, J Wife and Mather. The following written by An Au- ^ mista woman to the Chronicleucf that city, will be read witb interest,by all true wives and .mothers: JSditor Augusta .Chronicle: Will you grant me space in your Kalulable columns to relate te your readers one of the most beautiful ex junples of mother lone that 1 .have ever witnessed.? ,Being in one of the large depart- y Bkant stores on .Broad -Street last c Thursday morning, I was attracted c by .the tenderness of a ilady in flitting v up a little newsboy in a nice warm a sweater, gloves and stockings. In t her conversation with JJic saleslady, whs -.was serving her, I overheard her j remark: "No, be<isjialimy boy, oaily e e. little newsboy 1 found standing on y the street corner with little baote e and almost frozen hands .and a beau- y tifully little face almost bleeding y from .tike blasts of the cold wind." j With the affection and dendernessj v as though the child were her very .c own, this mother (for she spoke of ii two little ones at home) gladdened e the heart and life of this little fel- c low who could not have been more than six or seven years of age. 'Twas c indeed .beautiful to watch the* glad- s some light and the expression of n gratitude beaming on his little face o as she fitted him in his new, warm 0 outfit. "No," she was heard to say, "I haven't lots of money, but I want n to see this dear little child made com- c fortablo and warm while selling his fi papers." What a beautiful example h of mother love; would to God that e the world was filled with mothers of cl this kind! How vividly It brings to our minds the teachings of the bless- tt ed Savior, "Inasmuch as ye do unto n: the least one of these ye do also unto tl your Father which is in heaven." ii To my mind and belief, God created d woman for two purposes alone in this world, wife and mother. What is b there in life that woman cannot ac-1 P complish through wifehood and tl motherhood? b Instead of suffragette, public speakers, saloon smashers and va- a] rious other things of notoriety for *r which woman of the present day is ^ clamoring, give us wives and moth- n ers; mothers who welcome these littie ones in their homes, taking them into their hearts as they grow to f0< manhood and womanhood; this ^ mother love grows with them, checking the tendency to vice and evil.Make 8t a world of your home, whether it be C1 cabin or palace, envelop it in a frame of mother love and our saloons, gam- '1( bling dens, etc., will soon close their *s doors for lack of business. 01 How many of us to-night, through e( memory, drift back to our childhood tr days, recalling that beautiful and old sweet poem: e( al "Backward, turn backward, O time le in your flight, m M-'.ke me a child again, just for tonight. w Mother come back from the echoless 03 shore, ai Take me again to your heart as of gt yore; th Kiss from my forehead the furrows to of care, ar Smooth the few silver threads out of my hair; di Over my slumbers your living watch rt keep, n< Itock me to sleep, mother, rock me to or sleep. of "Backward, flow backward, O tide of br the years, di I am so weary of toil and of tears? Toil without recompense, tears all in ti< ?- A^ vain? Take them and give me my child- ti< hood again. * w' Over my heart in the days that are flown * No other worship abides ?dkyma No love like mother love ever has er shown? 80 No other worship abides and en- *** dures? 811 Faithful, unselfish and patient like 80 yours. "a None like a mother can charm away pain From the sick soul and the worldweary .brain ed Slumber's soft calm o'er my heavy Pc lido creep? co Rock me to sleep, mother, rock me to at lids creep? Tli ? fes Bryan says the weekly country ^e newspapers of the nation are the true re* guardians of the people's liberties, as :hey are owned, as a general thing, by the men who edit them, and are free from corporation control. We Kf relieve this is true, not only of the fr< country press of South Carolina, but to )f the city dallies also. If there is Br i corporation controlled newspaper In clc his State, we have never heard of it. rfe ? of Naval Gunners Killed. Two French naval gunners were cilled and a number of others woundid by the explosion of a thre> inch m< i.un on board the dreadnought Da?i- at< on, during target practice In the fle eadstead in the Salines rl'Hyheros, de France. at lOBMBS IF m ONMIUNS IN HGIICO CITT Affij AVfflL \wm WIFE HIMSELF i IceiiM Are Graphically Dcscribnd hy E|? Witnesses.?People and 8oldiera Are Slaughtered bj .the Score.?Houses Ane Looted l>j JSoL diers .and liandita. The conditions in Mexico City nre Ini/irlhaH a a halns' *1 w fill All tlio lorrors ?tf a bombardment have Ij^.eu; >xperienctHi by the residents of the, :ity for many days. The effect oil icious machine gun aund rifle in the; treets at .a range sometimes of less ban 100.yards also has been terrible.1, Scarcely a district oS the CapitaJ iaa escaped injury. Oner and thru' (very quarter at some time shell* lave torn and screeched and explodd. Little round shells firom the auomatic pompons have addled to the error and destruction. How many have been hilled or vounded is a rjuestion wfejch none an answsr wltlb any exactitude. It 3 doubtful wihether even the Govrnmnct records will ever reveal the orrect number. From a source usually considered areful and conservative, it has been tated that the number of dead is ot less than 2,000, while the total f the wounded amounts to from 8,00 to 10,000. The great majority of these are ot soldiers, but men, women and hildren unable to escape the lines of re. This estimate was made after earing the reports of scores of oflic? ' i - TTTUii. j T-*?a J rs or ine wuue anu iveu oius? ouleties of the hospitals. It is a well known fact that de- ' ichments of fifty and one hundred len have been slaughtered here and 1 lere at various times when caught ' 1 the narrow streets and mowed own by machine guns. Carts piled high with corpses have een seen to be driven past a certain J oint to a spot in the outskirts of ' le city, where the bodies have been ' i urned. Every morning may be seen what ppear in the zone of the actual fight- ' ig to be piles of burning rubbish. ' hose heaps are for the most part 1 lbbish, but the odor of burning llesh 1 ills another story. A practical though grewsomo meth- * 3, has been utilized in one place, he gas escaping from a broken main ' as been lighted and there in that ^ eadv flame has been improvised a 1 ^ematory. ' In the basement of an apartment c ouse a few blocks from the arsenal ( the grave of Mrs. E. W. Holmes, c le of the two American women kill I early in the fighting by the en- ? ance into her home of a shell, or three days her husband remain- 1 1 alone there with the corpse, un- I ale to remove it and unwilling to 1 avo it, perhaps, to suffer further ? utilation. t Soldiers entered the apartment a here he kept vigil and before his ? res robbed the place. He managed c i find boards and carpenter's tools c id nails in the building and con- s ructed a coffin, into which he laid ? e body of his wife. He carried it ? to the basement and there dug t id filled her grave. c The absolute cessation of all in- ? jstrial and business activity is fast 8 iducing an enormous number of in-conibatants to a state bordering t l starvation. The more fortunate t e in many cases able to take care t themselves, but the closing of the c inks has made precarious the con- b tion even of some of these. e The provisional banking instith- b 3n established for American rosi- * mts who find themselves in difficul- * *s has been meeting their demands F ith currency. Aside from the ques- h in of money, however, the situa- 8 >n has been rendered more difficult * ' the failure of vegetables and oth- d farm produce to reach the city for P j 1 iuA r< me nays. uuriug ui? ih^iu ijuttm e9 enter, but not nearly enough to k pplv the demand, and meat is ? mething with which thousands ? .ve had no acquaintance for days. d ? ? ? ci Kills the Wrong I*riest. a A visiting Catholic clergyman nam- j Wengeler was shot and killed by a dish workman Wednesday in the nfessional at St. Englebert's church ^ Muclheim-Am-Ruhr, Germany. 10 murderer, who had asked to con*s to the priest, was arrested. He clared he had intended to kill the gular priest of the church. ? m * n Mismated l?y Flip of Coin. Harry Williams, of Hutchinson, sj in., has .been granted a divorce '"i ? ?i - fIT 1 1) 1 ii.nt, m )iTi aiaaie win vviinams. ouo **?? have married Count Hugo Leal, a ' azilian, but flipped a coin to dele for Williams. They were mar- * id in 1911 in a motor car in front the Reno county court house. Four Children Cremftted. ^ Locked in their home while their L, >ther called at a neighbor's for le sr, the four children of Joseph Hat- st id ere cremated in the flames that w stroyed the house Tuesday night bj Sante Fe, Ky. pi PLANS WAR ON fUtT" , v THEY OW BE EASILY JULLE1) ? I NOW IN THE HOME. 1 % Warm 1%? In Winter Oiler Best Opportunity for Conducting War of J Extermination. The Nevis and Courier agys the ] Charleston Civic Club is .preparing for an actives house and yard cleaning campaign a:ith the advent ol spring. A meeting <.of the health committee was held recently at the resiciftnro of Dr. Allen to consider among other ^ubpocts ridding homes and shops of itfies. iMr. William E. Simmons. who .lias earned distinction as a liy-flglitei, 1 was present by invitation to give h'.s> t .views and a jiractical demonstration c of fly-killing. After a Drier talk lie c abowed how easy it would l>e for ev- c ecry housewife and shopkeeper to kill * the flieB indoors. F "The extermination of tne fly, ? sail Mr. Simmons, "is a vital necessity. In the ligJUt of recent discor- v eries he stands revealed as the most f deadiy enemy of mankind?more a deadfly even than war. In the Span- c ish-American war he killed a hun- v dred .times more good America* sol- S diers than the Spanish bullets Unrted States army surgeons fixed in- t dubitably upon him the responsibility li for the frightful mortalitly tnat oc- \ curred in the great military camps 7 from typoid fever, dysentery and otii- 1 er diseases. The proof was so over- n whelming that the United States bureau of entomology has renamed him 0 the 'typhoid fly'. v "A few years ago alarming out- (, breaks of typhoid fever in New York p city were traced to his agency. In- S) vestigation found him congregating a In vast numbers on floating sewer- ,, age along the river fronts. Captured (j specimens were loaded with typhoid p germs. By sprinkling red powder on c groups the movements of the flies ^ were traced directly to the infected y sections of the city. Later an out- p break of typhoid fever occurred at v Plattsburg, N. Y. Local authorities j attributed it to water, milk or some j foodstuff, but an investigator from y \Tew York city showed it was due to ^ flies, by tracing them from the cow 3rage of the Saranac lUver to the nfected portions of the city. Surgeon aeneral Moore, of the British army n India, traced an epidemic of carbuncles to flies that swarmed by a roadside. Innumerable other Instances of the agency of Ilic3 in ? spreading disease might be cited, but e< ;he above are sufficient. "The fly is not merely a nusance, le is noxious, exceedingly noxious. b Vitli frightful industry he spreads ty- tc ihoid fever, dysentery, cholera, car* 111 buncles, consumption, enteritis and w ither intestinal disorders; , whooping ^ ;ough, grippe, diptheria, supparation >r festering of wounds and abrasions )f the skin, blood poisoning In fact, ilmost all infectious diseases. ol "His hairy body and legs are cun- * ling contrived vehicles for transportng particles of filth and other geim 8 nediums to the person's food ana Irink of human beings. The foot of he fly is a perfect mop for swabbing ind conveying disease germs. Germs ire also conveyed in the excrement >r 'fly-spec' too frequently deposited b' >n food and drink. It has been ci hown that 5,000 children are killed y< innually by flies in New York city a1 lone. About half a million cases of in yphoid fever and 5 0,000 deaths oc- &t ur every year in these United States, w md the fly is responsible tor the la ;reater number, if not all of them. "Ne more important work then can m >e undertaken by any community dc ban to exterminate the fly. The to ime is fast coming when it will be of onsidered a disgrace for any city to ji e infested by flies. Rut how can we cr xterminate them? The problem can pf 0 solved more easily than Is goneilly believed. The first step Is to kill w] very fly you find in the winter time. nc Mies nnivited take refuge in your 00 omos from the winter cold and pro- Ar erve themselves to go out and breed be rith the return of spring. On warm ays they come from their hiding j.f laces and buzz about the dining y< oom or kitchen. Then is the time to ^ ill them. You can do It easily and . ffectively with Sheppard's Fly Driv- ^ r. Cleveland, Ohio, has earned the istinction ef being called the 'flyless ^ Ity.' The result was accomplished ^ lainly by a campaign for killing flies 1 winter time. Every housewife ' lould get immediately on the lob. t "The second step in the work of cr< ^termination is to attack the breed- . is jg place, but that can be safely ao- /? srred until spring, and is propei ly ^ le business of the municipal author- j> . tpfi " ^ Wo commend the above to waders. We are all interested ettlng rid of the flies Why V art a crusade against these ght here at home, and lessel^ , enace they bring to our ^ y ow is the time to exterminate nie ies. Kill every one you se^ ^ i? city break up the breedfr6&urac8s. X* ~ 4-^.V Would Not The concurrent regSluTlgf^J&^m stc le senate to request ^f^^r^ohn th< , McLaurln of Marlb^o^^f^t^Sf ?/ gtslatures of otl^fc^<rf$i^a^n^; ? ^ ates to present to tfrim &i arehousing cottp^tfga-^rote^Sfcw^ %;| r the house. ItijcfcrffeNf n& *&p*>latloB. -WVVVVV^ %y\wAA' ?V VA> o V? 4 * \ * * VAVA i.v^vV ^m^ EsW885 ^ I SENTENCED TOr-Push H H ['resident Patterson, of the Nfttion^ H Cash Register, Oets One Year in ^1 \ . jn Jail and Pay a Fine of Five Hun- 1 jv J clred Dollars and Others Get Less- |?| or Terms and Fines. " * At Cincinnati John H. Patterson, < jresldent of the National Cash Regis- ;s '--M er Company, who, with twenty*sight other officials or f rmer officials-^ 1^| >f the company, was convicted ?f * i | riminal violation of the Oberman abjtk ? i-trust law, was sentenced Monday to. .VilMj >ay a fine of |5,000 and to serve oa^ ' ear in jail. ' &*'% I! The twenty-eight other defendants % ( -j-' irere sentenced to terms ranging rom nine months to a year in jaiiVv nd to pay the costs. The men were\.,^vA onvicted last Thursday of having' > ' iolated the criminal section of the ' herman anti-trust law. George Edgeter of Dayton, sec re- *jrogR ; ary of tho company, was given the ightest sentence, of three months. '$3 V m. Bippus, treasurer; Altred A. & 'hoinas of Dayton, and Jonathan B. lay ward, of New York, were given J ine months in jail each. . H The following were sentenced to no year: Edward A. Deeds, Dayton, ice-president; Win. II. .Muzzy, Dayon; Will. Plum, Dayton; Robert 'atterson, director; Thomas J. Waton, sales manager; Joseph Rogers, ssistant manager; Alexander C. Hared, salesman; Frederick S. High, istrict manager, Boston; Pliney laves, district manager, San Fran- 4 isco. Arthur A. Wentz, Columbus; eo. E. Morgan, Dayton; Chas. T. ^almsley, Chicago, Chas. A. Snyder, llizabeth, N. J.; Walter Cool, Den r; iMyer N. Jacobs, Pittsburg; M. i. Lasley, Detroit; Earl !D. Wilson, os Angeles, Alex W. Sinclair, New ork; John I. Range, Washington-; [. Cr. Keith, New York; Wm. Cumlins, Rrooklyn; J. C. Laird, Tornto; W. C. Ilowe, San Francisco; !. H. Epperson, Minneapolis. Before passing sentence Judge Holster denied the motion of the de- 5 mdants for a new ttrial. The bond f President Patterson was increas[1 to $10,000, the sureties of other efendants remaining the same. Forlal notice of an appeal to the United tates Circuit Court was given by at>rneys for the defendants. The three lonths' sentence of George Bdgeter j as ordered set aside by Judge Hoi- ^ ster. * Judgo Hollister, in passing sen?nce, severely arraigned the defen- $ 4 mts, declaring that the maintenance f the competition department, with V* s "gloom room" and "morgue'', ^ instituted business methods that _ CU 8 iould not be countenanced. y ^o^4 "Technically there are three of nces, all practically the same," he t/0 ^ ^ lid. "To sentence on each count, ^ Dwever, would be unjust. There- ft 6 ire, 1 shall consider you as guilty olk^ ?4><o ^ lit one offence, and there shall be ncf^ lmulativo sentence. I must ma^^/^.^, >ur cases an example to others who & ^ ^ "c engaged in the same kind of tytts- ^ < ess. The penalties I impose and out as a warning to those'^v^ ^ 4 4 ould try to violate the law nd in this manner. a eQ "I have never heard of a)?] ate concern having a con^SitT^g'^apartment, whose sole duti^slft*?i$>t?f sell goods, but to prevent ' goods by competitors," ^ai^J<^l?e/v?> ?<t ollister. "The only wa^(Wt>^ iticise them is to say tl^t?4di^t >tty and mean. $ ^ A * V v 9\ <o. q ^ "This concern made^ casn*r^?mter <? hich was of such vaVio<$o tm/rn^i- "K +<*^0* ;ss world that uld have been id sucn meinour 'tio*- dhivw ? a " en needed. %?*i ? "You men bej<mg to e which shrink! sel the <* * you have^st \ *$$$&**, at was given to you by^iesmr&lffola^ v* lich you jpursue<j$? in yw* r gain you^forgot ?ierxjtmng\ate^;<,v. * 4 * a mo,4\r^ w0\\v< snt wa? tff^^oitcliy ^fct>|ni<^n%v ^ */ ^ <4 torney^ eofhrictt^ ?<**x> ^ lo q/*<th*. raa^n-fc s^foi^i m fite\ dtiyi^ v^s^tr^t^fji^sfi^rmj<h antiv? ' '* ^ ' jst^liicr jnsofftr'^is^t amemms to v \$e off^<^ ptonames, * >^v -?8 fy'vv^itutlon at xv se,,v^ v< it %3rrfel&l^ jfyn.1%% flftk/^^v, * v? vs-? ^vw^r %JU4, <0 <$< *v a'' %''?3 ?^w? %.s /'SSKa\ #\.\? v->:> ^#-xv